Los Angeles Times

Nike will stop selling its products on Amazon

Athletic brand ends a pilot project with the online giant and will focus on boosting its own e-commerce.

- By Eben Novy-Williams and Spencer Soper Novy-Williams and Soper write for Bloomberg.

Nike Inc. is breaking up with Amazon.com Inc.

The athletic brand will stop selling its sneakers and apparel directly on Amazon’s website, ending a pilot program that began in 2017.

The split comes amid a massive overhaul of Nike’s retail strategy. It also follows the hiring of former EBay Inc. Chief Executive John Donahoe as its next CEO — a move that signaled the company is going even more aggressive­ly after e-commerce sales, apparently without Amazon’s help.

“As part of Nike’s focus on elevating consumer experience­s through more direct, personal relationsh­ips, we have made the decision to complete our current pilot with Amazon Retail,” the company said in a statement. “We will continue to invest in strong, distinctiv­e partnershi­ps for Nike with other retailers and platforms to seamlessly serve our consumers globally.”

The relationsh­ip was engineered to ease the concerns big brands had about devaluing their products on a giant e-commerce platform, where fake merchandis­e can flourish and unauthoriz­ed distributo­rs can undermine prices. Under the pilot program, Nike acted as a wholesaler to Amazon,

rather than just letting third-party merchants hawk its products on the site.

Amazon operates an online marketplac­e, essentiall­y a digital mall where merchants can sell products. More than half of all goods sold on Amazon come from independen­t merchants who pay the Seattle company a commission on each sale.

Amazon also operates as a traditiona­l retailer, buying goods from wholesaler­s and selling them to customers.

Nike said it will continue to use Amazon’s cloud-computing unit, Amazon Web Services, to power its apps and Nike.com services.

Amazon, through a spokeswoma­n, declined to comment. But the company has been preparing for the move, according to two people familiar with the matter. It has been recruiting thirdparty sellers with Nike products so that the merchandis­e is still widely available on the site, they said.

The question now is whether other Amazon partners follow Nike’s lead. Few other brands possess the kind of muscle Nike has, so it may be harder for them to leave.

“Nike has enormous reach and its products are in demand, so it can afford to be selective about where its products are distribute­d because customers will come find Nike where it is offered,” said Neil Saunders, an analyst at GlobalData Retail. “I don’t think as many brands can be as selective as Nike.”

For years, the only Nike products sold on Amazon were gray-market items — and counterfei­ts — sold by others. Nike had little control over how they were listed, what informatio­n about the product was available and whether the products were even real.

That changed in 2017, when Nike joined Amazon’s brand registry program. Executives hoped the move would give them more control over Nike goods sold on the e-commerce site, more data on their customers and added power to remove fake Nike listings.

The news of the Amazon tie-up, which Nike executives called a “small pilot,” sent shoe-retailer stocks tumbling and left many wondering if other major Amazon holdouts would quickly follow.

But Nike reportedly struggled to control the Amazon marketplac­e. Thirdparty sellers whose listings were removed simply popped up under a different name. Plus, the official Nike products had fewer reviews, and therefore received worse positionin­g on the site.

Leaving Amazon won’t necessaril­y solve Nike’s problems, which represent a big brand struggling to adapt to selling products in the digital age, said James Thomson, a former Amazon employee who now helps brands sell products online through Buy Box Experts.

“Just because Nike walks away from Amazon doesn’t mean its products walk away from Amazon and doesn’t mean its brand problems disappear,” Thomson said. “Even if every single Nike product isn’t on Amazon, there will be enough of a selection that someone looking for Nike on Amazon will find something to buy.”

Shortly after its Amazon pilot began, Nike unveiled plans to overhaul its retail strategy.

With more attention aimed at direct-to-consumer avenues, particular­ly the Nike app and Nike.com, executives said the company would drasticall­y reduce the number of retailers it partnered with.

In 2017, Nike did business with 30,000 retailers around the world. Elliott Hill, head of consumer and marketplac­e operations, told investors that year that Nike would focus its future efforts primarily on about 40 partners.

Nike wasn’t specific on what would separate those 40 partners from what it called “undifferen­tiated retail.” Reading between the lines, it appeared to want partners that gave Nike a separate brand space — such as Nordstrom’s “Nordstrom x Nike” shop on its website — and was less interested in retailers that just place Nike alongside its other smaller competitor­s.

The Wall Street Journal reported at the time that Amazon was one of those 40 that Nike intended to prioritize.

About 68% of Nike’s annual sales come from wholesale channels, down from 81% in 2013.

Though wholesale is still the bulk of the company’s sales, in that span Nike’s direct business has grown three times faster than topline revenue.

Nike’s departure will rob Amazon’s brand registry program of a big name — and potentiall­y stoke the concerns of its partners. Nike’s participat­ion had signaled that Amazon was taking the concerns of major brands seriously.

Such brands have expressed frustratio­n that Amazon doesn’t do enough to fight counterfei­ts. They also fear that giving Amazon too much control over prices will devalue their products.

 ?? Kevin Mazur Getty Images ?? NIKE products will be available on Amazon after its pilot project ends, but not directly from the maker.
Kevin Mazur Getty Images NIKE products will be available on Amazon after its pilot project ends, but not directly from the maker.

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